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E-raamat: Marx versus Big Tech: Alienated Labour in the Digital Age

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This book asks whether Marx's concepts can still be useful to those seeking emancipation in the time of platform capitalism. Offering a pointed discussion of what emancipation in the workplace would mean, it explores the potential of Humanist Marxism to address this possibility.

Humanist Marxism, as advocated by Georg Lukács and Henri Lefebvre, among others, provides invaluable tools for analysing the transformations and shortcomings of contemporary society. It puts forward the hypothesis that a universal human essence evolves over time thanks to the efforts of individuals in their work, gradually humanising the world and increasing the wealth and power of societies. However, with this progress comes a "dark side" caused by advances in technology and digital platforms, bringing new forms of alienation and dramatically altering our relationships with work and others. Drawing on analysis of platforms such as Uber and positing that labour plays a key role in human bondage or emancipation, the book shows how platformisation is a new strategy of exploitation.

Drawing on the contributions and debates within Humanist Marxism, this book offers a clear and philosophically rich reading of our world that can provide a serious basis for a theory of liberation relevant to our times. It will be vital reading for researchers and post-graduate students with interests in Marxism, social and political thought, alternatives to capitalism and political philosophy.

Arvustused

This latest installment by one of the most prominent French thinkers is an exhilarating attempt to rethink Marxist humanism in light of the profound transformations of capitalism. It offers an original reading of neo-liberalism, financialization of the economy, post-Fordist organization of the workplace, alienation and technology. It is a must-read for anyone interested in understanding which aspects of Marxist thought are still relevant to the meandering complexities of contemporary societies.

Eva Illouz, Director of Studies at European Center of Sociology and Political Science (CSE-EHESS), Paris, France.

Introduction: The great contradiction of our time Part I: A toolmaking
animal
1. A materialist anthropology of labour
2. [ C]apitalist society is a
vast cemetery for integrity and human capacity: The contribution of
Lukácsian humanist marxism Part II: The metamorphoses of labour in the age of
neoliberalism
3. The new neoliberal order and the post-Fordist organisation
of labour
4. Labour in the era of platform capitalism Part III: Everyday life
5. Capitalism's assault on free time
6. The self as a commodity Conclusion:
Neo-romanticism or critical progressivism
Stéphanie Roza is a researcher at the CNRS's SND laboratory (Sorbonne University). Initially, her research focused on the "collectivist" utopias of the Enlightenment and the French Revolution, from Morelly to Babeuf. She then turned her attention to the legacy of 18th-century France in the communist, socialist, and anarchist left-wing movements of the last two centuries. Her recent publications include: La gauche contre les Lumières? (2020), Lumières de la gauche (2022), Le Marxisme est un humanisme (2024) and Utopia: From the Novel to Revolution (2025).